National Building, Loan & Provident Ass'n v. Alfree
This text of 89 A. 55 (National Building, Loan & Provident Ass'n v. Alfree) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
delivering the opinion of the court:
By the rule of reference it appears that “all matters in controversy ” between the parties were referred, and it was urged that matters in dispute not in the case were heard without a special order of the court, but it clearly appears that only matters in dispute within the action were heard.
[437]*437
It appears from the evidence that the only question before the referees was the balance due on the original and only loan secured by the mortgage.
From statements made by counsel for the defendant it'would seem that the latter thought when he received the surrender value of his said stock, that he was incurring a new indebtedness to the plaintiff. As a borrowing member, the monthly dues paid on the two shares of stock originally assigned-as collateral security, to say nothing about the dues paid upon the additional shares of stock held by him, did not ipso facto become payments on the mortgage. The only payments made upon the mortgage were the payments of monthly interest. When the defendant requested and received the surrender value of the shares of stock which he did surrender, including the surrender value of the two shares of stock originally assigned as collateral security for the payment of the mortgage debt, he did not receive any moneys which by the law of Building Loan Associations had become applicable to and [438]*438in discharge pro tanto of the mortgage. And in receiving the same, he did not incur any new indebtedness to the association. He simply requested and received his own—the cash surrender value of his shares of stock not pledged for the payment of the mortgage, and, by permission of the association, was permitted to have the cash value of the two shares which he had originally assigned as collateral security upon his assigning two new shares as collateral. No part of the mortgage was paid, nor was any new indebtedness created by this transaction. From the' hearing on the exceptions it is manifest that the mortgage sued upon is not held for advances made to the defendant after the mortgage debt, or any part thereof, had been paid.
The exceptions are dismissed, and the award of the referees is confirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
89 A. 55, 27 Del. 434, 4 Boyce 434, 1913 Del. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-building-loan-provident-assn-v-alfree-delsuperct-1913.